Food, Land, Population, and the U.S. Economy, by David Pimentel, Cornell University and Mario Giampietro Isiituto Nazionale dell, Nutrizione, Rome.
Originally published by Carrying Capacity Network.
The United States is in a privileged situation compared to other nations in the world. At the same time, the United States is seriously risking loosing this privilege if more attention is not given to the control of population growth (including immigration), the sustainable management of natural resources, and the
development of alternative energy sources.

How and Why Journalists Avoid the Population-Environment Connection.
Recent surveys show that Americans are less concerned about population than they were 25 years ago, and they are not connecting environmental degradation to population growth. Journalists are aware of the controversial nature of the population issue, and prefer to avoid it if possible.

Humans as Cancer, by A. Kent MacDougall.
(plain text version).
"Never before in the history of the earth has a single species been so widely distributed and monopolized such a large fraction of the energetic resources."

Negative Population Growth papers include the NPG Forum series, NPG Special Papers, NPG Footnotes, and NPG Position Papers.
Excellent material from experts in the fields of population and sustainability.

The Big Squeeze, by Norman Myers; San Diego Earth Times;
an article on population, consumption, and carrying capacity.

The Cornucopia Scam, by Sandy Irvine; Wild Earth.
discusses the need for an ethic of sustainability.

The Environmental Movement's Retreat from Advocating U.S. Population Stabilization;
by Roy Beck and Leon Kolankiewicz.
This article is highly recommended to all population activists,
environmentalists, and funders of environmental organizations.
It examines in detail the events leading to abandonment
of domestic population stabilization efforts by major environmental
organizations. ZPG and Sierra Club are used as case studies in the
article.

The Population-Environment Connection
What Does It Mean for Environmental Policy? - A research paper by Battelle Seattle Research Center.
"Environmental issues are inherently human issues. As emphasized throughout this report, human activity both
affects and in turn is affected by the environment. An understanding of human population demography is one
important element in understanding that relationship."

The Social Contract
A Quarterly Journal on Social Issues,
The Social Contract Press, Petosky, MI,
800.352.4843, ($25).
This journal carries excellent articles on overpopulation and sustainability.
Search for articles - 10 years of articles are archived on the web!

Top of the Ninth, by Joel Campbell.
The world as we know it cannot sustain much more population growth without increasing the instances of food shortages, lack of resources, poverty, ozone depletion, deforestation, and desertification, to name a few. Something must be done soon because "Nature bats last!". Interesting reading.

World Population Prospects, 1990, United Nations, Dept. International Economic and Social Affairs. Population Studies, #120,
ISBN 92-1-151223-9. (607p,$85.00),
review.
Contains population statistics by region and country.

People and Place,
published quarterly by the Australian Forum for Population Studies,
presents key information on migration patterns, the labour market,
urban growth, the environment and related topics.